Abstract

The Olf-1 transcription factor is expressed in olfactory sensory neurons where it regulates the expression of genes that encode components of the odorant signal transduction cascade and contributes to the terminal phenotype of these sensory neurons. We examined the pattern of expression of Olf-1 protein during mouse embryogenesis and observed Olf-1 expression transiently in a subset of neural precursor cells in the CNS and peripheral nervous system. The expression of Olf-1 protein was enriched in sensory components and coincided with postmitotic cells and the initiation of overt differentiation within the nervous system. The spatial and temporal patterns of Olf-1 expression during development suggest a role in neurogenesis that is common among different neural cell types. In parallel, the expression pattern of Pax-6, a transcription factor that is widely expressed in the developing nervous system, including the visual and olfactory systems, was examined with a C-terminal antibody. In the retina, Pax-6 protein is detected in the lens, the cornea, and the neural and pigmented retinas. In the olfactory epithelium, Pax-6 protein is expressed exclusively in cells of non-neuronal lineage, including sustentacular cells, basal cells, and Bowman’s glands. The nonoverlapping, cellular localization patterns of Pax-6 and Olf-1 demarcate distinct cell lineages within the developing olfactory epithelium.

The developing vertebrate nervous system acquires its characteristic form and diverse cellular composition via extrinsic and intrinsic cues generated by a programmed pattern of gene expression. The olfactory system, a component of the CNS, provides a useful model for studying the nature of the cues involved in neurogenesis, in light of its unique capacity to replace continually its neurons throughout adult life (Moulton, 1974; Graziadei and Monti Graziadei, 1978). The replacement of olfactory neurons with an average lifespan of 60–90 d (Costanzo and Graziadei, 1987) is regulated by proliferative and differentiative events.

The generation and replacement of cells in the epithelium must be regulated in a dynamic fashion to maintain proper function in olfactory tissue. The importance of extrinsically derived trophic factors and receptors (fibroblast growth factor, transforming growth factor-β, and nerve growth factor receptor) in modulating olfactory neuronal development has been described recently (Mahanthappa and Schwarting, 1993; DeHamer et al., 1994; Calof, 1995; Roskams et al., 1996). Transcription factors play an equally important role as intrinsic regulators of neurogenesis. The identification of vertebrate Pax genes was based on the conservation of the Paired domain first discovered in several Drosophila segmentation genes (Gruss and Walther, 1992). Mouse Pax-6 mRNA was detected early in the optic and olfactory pits and later in the developing eye, olfactory epithelium (OE), and olfactory bulb by in situ hybridization (Walther and Gruss, 1991). Mice with mutations in the Pax-6 gene (small eye,Sey) failed to form lens and nasal placodes, resulting in the absence of eyes and nose (Thieler et al., 1978; Hogan et al., 1986;Hill et al., 1991), whereas mutations in the human Pax-6 gene lead to malformation of eye structures in a disease known as aniridia (Glaser et al., 1992; Hanson et al., 1993).

An olfactory neuronal transcription factor, Olf-1 (Wang and Reed, 1993), binds to a conserved, cis-acting element upstream of several olfactory neuronal-specific genes (Kudrycki et al., 1993; Wang et al., 1993), suggesting a role in regulating genes that function in odorant detection. The expression of Olf-1 in adult olfactory neurons and their neuronal precursors suggested that Olf-1 may also have a role in the continual replacement of these sensory neurons. The similarities between the continual generation of neurons in adult OE and neurogenesis throughout the embryo—proliferation, exit from the cell cycle, commencement of a neuronal phenotype, and turnover—led us to examine whether Olf-1 may play a more general role in neurodevelopment. In parallel, we investigated the pattern of Pax-6 expression, a transcription factor known to be important in sensory organ development and expressed in embryonic olfactory tissue, to determine the role this protein plays in olfactory tissue. Generation of an antibody to the Olf-1 and Pax-6 transcription factors allowed us to demonstrate that these transcription factors define distinct and nonoverlapping cell lineages within the OE and provided insight into the mechanisms that underlie neurodevelopment.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Tissue preparation. CD 1 mouse embryos of embryonic days 12–16 (E12–E16) (as determined by a timed pregnancy, with E0.5 designated as the morning after an evening mating) and postnatal day (PD) 1 animals were fixed by immersion in freshly prepared 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS or Bouin’s fixative (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) overnight at 4°C. Fixed embryos were washed in 1× PBS and then in saline for 30 min each at 4°C, dehydrated through a graded series of ETOH washes, cleared in xylenes, and embedded in paraffin. Tissue sections (8–10 μm) were collected on untreated Superfrost/Plus slides (Fisher, Pittsburgh, PA), heated at 56°C for 1 hr, and stored at 4°C. Slides of E8, E10, and E11 National Institutes of Health Swiss mice embryos were purchased (Novagen, Madison, WI). Adult mice were perfused with ice-cold PBS followed by either freshly prepared 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS or Bouin’s solution. Tissues of interest were removed and post-fixed in fresh fixative for 2 hr at 4°C. Adult sections were prepared as described for embryos.

Anti-peptide antibody generation. To generate specific antisera to Pax-6 and Olf-1, peptides corresponding to the 17 C-terminal residues of the mouse Pax-6 protein (H2N-QVPGSEPDMSQYWPRLQ-COOH) and the 16 C-terminal residues of the Olf-1 protein (H2N-NGNSLQAISGMIVPPM-COOH) were synthesized, coupled to bovine serum albumin (BSA) using glutaraldehyde, and injected into rabbits to generate polyclonal antisera. By Western blot analysis, the crude antiserum detected protein products of the predicted size from lysates containing recombinant protein. The Pax-6 antisera were purified on an affinity column prepared by linking the Pax-6 peptide to Affi-Gel 10 support according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Bio-Rad, Melville, NY). Crude serum was passed over a peptide affinity column, and the matrix was washed with 20 bed volumes of 10 mm Tris, pH 7.5, followed by 20 bed volumes of 10 mm Tris, pH 7.5, and 500 mm NaCl. The antibody was eluted at low pH with 100 mm glycine, pH 3.0, and neutralized rapidly with 1 m Tris, pH 8.0. Antisera to Olf-1 were purified over a Protein A Sepharose column according to manufacturer’s instructions. Material eluted from each of the columns was stabilized with BSA (100 ug/ml), and aliquots were stored at −80°C.

Western blot analysis of Pax-6 protein. Total cellular protein was prepared from tissues of adult C57BL/6 mice by homogenization in 2× SDS sample buffer using a polytron. After an equal volume of water was added to each sample, equivalent amounts of protein were fractionated on a 12% polyacrylamide gel under reducing conditions and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane for 24 hr at 100 mA. The filter was incubated in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) containing 5% nonfat dry milk to reduce nonspecific binding and incubated with affinity-purified Pax-6 antiserum (1/200) for 16 hr at 4°C; immunoreactivity was visualized with HRP-conjugated anti-rabbit Ig and enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham, Arlington Heights, IL).

Immunohistochemistry. All steps were carried out at room temperature except where noted otherwise. Sections were deparaffinized in Hemo-De (Fisher) twice for 5 min each, rehydrated using a graded series of ETOH washes, and washed in PBS for 15 min. To optimize antigenicity in tissue that had been perfused or immersion-fixed in paraformaldehyde, the slides were placed in a dish of water (∼1–1.5 inches on top of the slides), section-side up, and microwaved on a setting of high for 15 min, allowed to cool to room temperature, post-fixed in Bouin’s solution for 15 min, and washed with several changes of PBS. Tissue sections were placed in a humidified chamber, blocked in 10% normal goat serum (NGS) in PBS for 15 min, and incubated with primary antiserum in 2% NGS in PBS for 60 min [1:100 dilution for IgG-purified anti-Olf-1 Ab, 1:30 for affinity-purified anti-Pax-6 Ab, and a 1:2000 dilution for polyclonal anti-NCAM (Chemicon, Temecula, CA)]. The sections were washed several times in PBS, 5 min each, treated for endogenous peroxidases with 3% hydrogen peroxide in water for 15 min, and washed again in PBS. Sections were incubated with biotinylated anti-rabbit Ig and avidin–biotin–horseradish peroxidase complex (Vectastain Elite ABC kit; Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA). Immunoreactivity was visualized with diaminobenzidine, Vector SG, or Vector VIP chromagens. Stained sections were mounted and coverslipped using Aqua-Poly/Mount (Polysciences, Warrington, PA).

RESULTS

Embryonic expression pattern of Olf-1 in postmitotic cells of the CNS and peripheral nervous system

To examine the expression pattern of Olf-1 during development, an antibody was generated to a peptide corresponding to the C-terminal 16 amino acids of the rat Olf-1 protein. The IgG-purified, anti-Olf-1 peptide antiserum (JH1132.5) was immunoreactive specifically with the nuclei of olfactory neurons and a subset of basal cells in the pseudostratified OE of the adult mouse (Fig. 1). Adjacent sections of adult mouse OE treated with either preimmune serum or with anti-Olf-1 antibody preincubated with the peptide showed no staining. The same pattern of immunostaining in adult rat OE was observed using a polyclonal antiserum generated to an Olf-1/GST fusion protein (Wang and Reed, 1993). Further characterization by Western blot analysis showed that the Olf-1 anti-peptide antibody specifically recognized a band of ∼69 kDa in HEK-293 cells transfected with the Olf-1 cDNA under the control of the CMV promoter (data not shown).

Olf-1 expression in mouse embryos was first observed in the CNS at E11 in the OE and in the anlage of the vomeronasal gland (VNO) in the olfactory pit (see Fig. 6A), a time when neuronal cell bodies within the epithelium begin to extend dendrites and axons (Cuschieri and Bannister, 1975a,b; Pellier et al., 1994). Cells in proximity to the olfactory axonal projection to the presumptive olfactory bulb were also Olf-1 positive (see Fig. 6A) and may represent luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone (LNRH) neurons known to migrate from the olfactory placode to the hypothalamus at this time. A second site of strong Olf-1 staining at E11 was in a subset of presumptive sensory neurons in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG), at a time coincident with onset of neurogenesis in this tissue (Altman and Bayer, 1984) (data not shown). Faint staining was detected throughout the brain at this time (see below). No signal was detected in the embryo before E11, even in the olfactory pit and the cellular condensation of DRGs. Sections incubated with preimmune serum failed to stain.

Embryonic expression of Olf-1 in the olfactory pit and epithelium. A, Expression of Olf-1 in the olfactory pit (OP). Olf-1 protein was localized to the ventral portion of the unstratified neuroepithelium that lines the OP and in nuclei located in an invagination of the OP, representing the anlage of the vomeronasal organ (VNO). Olf-1-positive nuclei adjacent to axonal projections from the olfactory nerve, possibly future LNRH-secreting neurons, are indicated with arrows. Low- (B, D, F) and high-magnification views (C, E, G) at E12 (B, C), E14 (D,E), and E16 (F, G) revealed Olf-1 immunoreactivity in the neuronal cell layer (NCL) and basal cells (indicated by arrows) near the basal lamina (BL).

A wider distribution of Olf-1 expression was detected by E12 in the mouse. Transverse sections revealed strong Olf-1 staining in all of the main subdivisions of the embryonic brain (Fig. 2). Olf-1 immunoreactivity was observed in a thin layer of cells located in the telencephalon (Fig. 2A,F). The Olf-1 signal coincides with the postmitotic cells adjacent to the proliferative, ventricular layer denoted by the cellular dense region of deep purple (black in Fig. 2B) after staining with hematoxylin/eosin. No Olf-1-positive immunoreactivity was observed in the proliferative, ventricular zone adjacent to the lateral ventricles. A discrete pattern of Olf-1 expression was observed in the diencephalon in regions of future thalamus and hypothalamus (Fig.2A,G). Olf-1 was localized to several regions adjacent to the fourth ventricle, including the alar plate of the myelencephalon and the alar lamina and basal plate of the metencephalon (Fig. 2A). Differential staining with hematoxylin/eosin confirmed that Olf-1 staining was absent from cells residing in the proliferative, ventricular layer adjacent to all ventricles (Sidman et al., 1959; Bulfone et al., 1995), with the exception of cells in the basal plate of the metencephalon (Fig.2B). We conclude that strong Olf-1 expression is restricted to postmitotic cells immediately adjacent to, but not including, the proliferative, ventricular layer in the E12 telencephalon, diencephalon, metencephalon, and mylencephalon.

Olf-1 expression was particularly abundant in a number of structures that mediate sensory activity in the adult. At a level caudal to the hindbrain, Olf-1 was expressed in the dorsal (alar plate) but not the ventral (basal plate) region of the neural tube at E12 (Fig.2C–E). Olf-1 staining stopped abruptly at a point corresponding to the ventral border of the alar plate and was absent from the roof plate and cells immediately adjacent to the central canal in the ventricular layer of the neural tube (Sauer, 1935; Nornes and Carry, 1978). Olf-1 expression could be detected at E12 in the sensory neuron-containing trigeminal ganglia, facioacoustic ganglion complex, glossopharyngeal nerve, and additional DRGs adjacent to the spinal cord (Fig. 2C). Sensory neurons within the DRGs continued to express Olf-1 at E12 (Fig. 2D). Intense staining was observed in the developing neural layer of the optic cup (data not shown), the margins of the future olfactory bulbs, and the OE (Fig.2D). Finally, a transverse section through the abdominal region of the E12 embryo showed Olf-1 immunoreactivity in the four segmental nerves of the tail and in the precartilage primordium of the limbs (Fig. 2E).

At midgestation, when the brain is undergoing massive proliferation and differentiation (Angevine and Sidman, 1961; Angevine, 1970; Altman and Bayer, 1985), intense Olf-1 staining was observed in the telencephalon in a thin layer of cells within the cerebral cortex and more diffusely in the primordium of the corpus striatum (Fig.3A,B). Olf-1 was also detected in the maturing olfactory bulb, which has begun to receive axons from the OE (Fig. 3B). Discrete Olf-1 immunoreactivity was seen in the diencephalon where hypothalamus and thalamus are developing at E14 (Fig. 3A,B). Neuronal cells forming specific thalamic nuclei arise over a period of 3–4 d between E10 and E15 (Altman and Bayer, 1979, 1988). Olf-1 expression was not homogeneous in the diencephalon and so may preferentially label cells comprising specific thalamic and hypothalamic nuclei. Intense Olf-1 staining was observed at E14 in the rhombencephalon (Fig. 3A–C), including the future pons and medulla oblongata, concomitant with a marked degree of differentiation in these hindbrain primordia between E13.5 and E15 (Altman and Bayer, 1985; Kaufman, 1992). The staining detected in the liver (Fig.3E) was not nuclear and was also observed with preimmune serum.

E14 expression of Olf-1 in the mouse. Transverse sections of an E14 mouse embryo immunostained with the Olf-1 antibody (A–G). In the telencephalon (Telen), Olf-1 staining was detected in the cortex (bold arrows inA and B) and in the striatum (small arrow in A). Discrete Olf-1 immunoreactivity is observed (A, B) in the diencephalon (Dien), in broad areas of the hindbrain including the pons (Pons) and medulla oblongata (Med Ob), and in sensory structures including the retina (Ret), olfactory epithelium (OE), olfactory bulb (OB), vomeronasal gland (VNO), whisker primordia (Whisker), and dorsal spinal cord (SC). F andG are high-magnification views of inner ear (IE) and trigeminal ganglion (TG), respectively.

Highest levels of Olf-1 protein expression in the E14 embryo were restricted to sensory structures. In particular, the olfactory turbinates, the VNO, and the neural retina (Fig. 3C,D) stained intensely with the antibody. Olf-1 expression was also observed in the primordia of follicles of vibrissae, or whiskers, the principal tactile receptors on the face. Olf-1 expression was first observed in components of the inner ear at this time (Fig. 3D,F). In the trigeminal ganglion, the majority of neurons expressed Olf-1, although the most intense staining occurred at the periphery (Fig.3C,G). We did not detect Olf-1 expression in any other tissues at E14 .

The spatial pattern of Olf-1 expression was retained at E16 in the mouse embryo (data not shown). No additional sites of Olf-1 immunoreactivity were detected. By PD1, Olf-1 immunostaining was dramatically reduced or absent in all embryonic locations except the spinal cord (see below) and in sites that in the adult continue to express Olf-1, including the OE, VNO, and retina.

Olf-1 expression in sensory neurons of the spinal cord and DRGs of the embryonic mouse

Olf-1 was expressed transiently in a spatially restricted pattern along the dorsoventral axis of the neural tube. At E12, robust Olf-1 staining was observed in cells of the dorsal neural tube. In particular, cells within the dorsal horns, the sensory neurons derived from the alar plate, exhibited intense Olf-1 immunoreactivity, whereas Olf-1 protein was conspicuously absent from the roof plate cells (Fig.4A). Olf-1 protein was not detected in the proliferative, ventricular layer of the neural tube, but rather was restricted to nuclei of postmitotic cells in the mantle layer of the neural tube, as assessed by hematoxylin/eosin staining (data not shown). Interestingly, the onset of Olf-1 expression at E12 coincided with the birth of dorsal horn neurons at E11.5–E13.5 (Nornes and Carry, 1978). A few cells were Olf-1-positive in the intermediate zone and in the ventral horns. By PD1, fewer cells were positive for Olf-1, and their location was further restricted to the outermost zones of the dorsal horn (Fig. 4B). A similar pattern of Olf-1 immunostaining was seen along the rostrocaudal axis of the spinal cord.

Embryonic expression of Olf-1 protein in the spinal cord and DRG. Transverse sections (dorsal side attop) of the spinal cord in an E12 (A) and PD1 (B) mouse stained with the Olf-1 antibody. Intense Olf-1 staining was detected predominantly in sensory neurons of the dorsal horns (DH), whereas only a few cells in the intermediate zone (IZ) and ventral horns (VH) were Olf-1-positive. No Olf-1 staining was observed in the roof plate (RP). Sagittal views of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) revealed Olf-1 expression at E11 (C), E12 (A), E14 (D), and E16 (E). C and E are high-magnification views.

An early site of Olf-1 expression in the developing embryo was the DRGs, composed of sensory neurons that transduce somatosensory information. At later embryonic times, the DRGs continued to stain intensely with the Olf-1 antibody (Fig. 4C–E). The expression of Olf-1 in DRGs was confirmed by in situhybridization with an 35S-labeled Olf-1 probe on adjacent sections (data not shown). Expression of Olf-1 protein in the DRG was not uniform. Neurons of different cell diameters are specifically associated with particular sensory modalities. Interestingly, Olf-1 was expressed in smaller-diameter cells that convey pain and thermal sensation, rather than the larger-diameter ganglion cells of the DRG that mediate discriminatory touch and propriosensation.

Expression pattern of Olf-1 in the mouse retina and OE correlates positively with neuronal differentiation

Staining with the Olf-1 antibody was found in the neural retina at all ages examined, but the distribution of the antigen showed dramatic changes during development. The onset of Olf-1 expression at E12 was restricted to cells in the central region of the inner layer (IL) of the neural retina, adjacent to the optic nerve (Fig.5A). These represent the first cells in the neural retina to exit the cell cycle (Young, 1985). A greater number of cells in the IL, extending from this central region toward the peripheral margins of the retina, were Olf-1 positive by E14 (Fig.5B). By E16, Olf-1 protein was detected in most if not all cells of the IL (Fig. 5C). Olf-1 staining was not observed in the outer layer (OL) of the neural retina in cells corresponding to the proliferative, ventricular cells common to the rest of the neural tube. Neuroretinal differentiation proceeds in a progressive fashion in two directions: laterally, from the optic nerve toward the peripheral margins of the retina, and radially, from the IL (the layer closest to the lens) toward the OL of the neural retina. The pattern of retinal Olf-1 protein reflects this progressive process of differentiation in both the radial and lateral directions (Sidman, 1970; Young, 1985). Olf-1-positive cells at PD1 were located in the ganglion cell layer (GCL) and the developing inner nuclear layer (INuL) (Fig.5D,E). In the adult mouse retina, we continued to detect Olf-1 expression in a discrete population of cells (Fig. 5F) in the GCL and in a subset of cells located in the inner half of the INL, perhaps amacrine cells. Olf-1 protein was not detected in the pigmented retina or in other parts of the developing or adult eye.

Expression in the OE is of particular interest, because differentiation continues in this tissue throughout embryonic and adult life. An olfactory turbinate at E12 showed Olf-1 immunostaining throughout the epithelium (Fig. 6B). A higher magnification of the epithelium revealed nuclear localization of the Olf-1 protein (Fig. 6C). By E14, when the turbinates become more convoluted and the pseudostratification of the OE is established, Olf-1 expression was confined to the lower two thirds of the epithelium, corresponding to the neuronal cell layer (Fig. 6D,E). The pattern of Olf-1 expression at E16 is similar to that observed at E14 (Fig. 6F,G), and in particular, Olf-1 positive cells lying close to the basement membrane, possibly basal cells, were evident.

Pax-6 expression in non-neuronal components of the OE in the embryonic and adult mouse

Antibodies to Pax-6 were generated, and their specificity was characterized by Western blot analysis. In agreement with the localization of Pax-6 mRNA determined by in situhybridization (Walther and Gruss, 1991), the Pax-6 antibody detected two closely migrating bands of ∼50 kDa on SDS polyacrylamide gels of tissue extracts from adult brain, olfactory bulb, eye, and olfactory turbinates, but not in liver (Fig. 7). The protein doublet corresponds to the sizes predicted for alternative spliced variants of Pax-6 (Walther and Gruss, 1991), whereas additional immunoreactive bands of faster mobility were detected in brain, in olfactory bulb, and in eye and may reflect alternative Pax-6-derived proteins (Martin et al., 1992) or breakdown products.

Western blot analysis of Pax-6 expression in the adult mouse. Tissue extracts from adult brain, olfactory bulb, eye, olfactory turbinates (olf), and liver were fractionated, and Pax-6 immunoreactive species were identified.

In the eye, Pax-6 immunohistochemistry revealed nuclear localized protein in both neuronal and non-neuronal cells in a pattern consistent with the low resolution in situ hybridization studies ofWalther and Gruss (1991). At E12, Pax-6 immunostaining was detected in the developing cornea and lens, which arise from a neuroectodermally derived placode. Both layers of the optic cup, which will form pigmented and neural retina, expressed Pax-6 protein (Fig.8A). Pax-6 expression continued in the E16 cornea, lens, and neural retina, although expression was not detected in the pigmented epithelium (Fig. 8B). The nonuniform Pax-6 immunostaining apparent at ED16 may reflect the developing laminar architecture of the retina. This pattern persists in the PD1 animal in all of the layers, even though considerable prenatal differentiation of retinal cell types has occurred (Turner and Cepko, 1987; Turner et al., 1990) (data not shown). Pax-6 expression in the adult retina was restricted to a subset of cells in the INuL, perhaps amacrine cells, and in scattered nuclei in the GCL (Fig.8C). We also observed Pax-6 immunoreactivity in the ciliary ganglia at PD1 (data not shown).

Cellular localization of Pax-6 in the retina and olfactory epithelium. Pax-6 protein was detected in the eye at E12 (A) and E16 (B) and in the adult mouse (C). The pigmented and neural retina (PRand NR), lens (L), cornea (C), ganglion cell layer (GCL), and inner nuclear layer (INuL) are indicated. In a cross-section of a PD1 mouse olfactory turbinate (D), Pax-6 immunoreactivity was observed in the sustentacular cell layer (SCL) and in the basal cell layer (BCL) (indicated by arrows). At higher magnification (E), Pax-6 immunostaining revealed additional unidentified cells in the middle of the epithelium (indicated byarrows). Pax-6 immunostaining at E12 (F) and adult (G). In G, Pax-6 protein is seen in cells of the Bowman’s glands (BG), including duct cells (small arrows) and acinar cells (large arrows). Cross-sectional views of the olfactory epithelium of a PD1 mouse immunostained with an NCAM antibody (H), Pax-6 and NCAM antibodies (I), or Olf-1 and NCAM antibodies (J). NCAM antibody stained (blue-gray) olfactory neuronal membranes (small arrows) and globose cell membranes (large arrows) inH and I. Two clusters of Pax-6 immunoreactive basal cell nuclei (red-purple) are indicated withasterisks (I). No cells were detected that reacted with both antibodies (I). Double-immunolabeled cells (J), indicated withbold arrows, were observed when the epithelium was first incubated with Olf-1 antibody (red-purple) and then with the NCAM antibody (blue-gray).

The cellular localization of Pax-6 in the OE in a section from PD1 mouse olfactory turbinate was revealed by immunostaining with the Pax-6 antibody. There was intense reactivity in the nuclei of the sustentacular cells and a subset of basal cells in the epithelium (Fig.8D,E) as well as in a small number of cells in the middle region of the epithelium. All of the staining was blocked when the Pax-6 antibody was incubated with an excess of the specific peptide. At E12, when pseudostratification of the epithelium has not yet been established (Cuschieri and Bannister, 1975a), Pax-6 immunostaining was seen in nuclei located throughout the OE, much like the pattern observed for Olf-1 staining at that day of embryogenesis (Fig.8F). By E16, Pax-6 immunoreactivity was restricted to nuclei in the apical and basal regions of the epithelium (data not shown) in a pattern that is retained in the adult mouse (Fig. 8G). In addition to cells in the neuroepithelium, Pax-6 was also detected in cells of the Bowman’s glands (Fig. 8G) and occasionally in stained arrays of cells extending from the Bowman’s glands through the epithelium, perhaps duct cells of the glands that open into the lumen.

To assess whether the basal cells that are immunoreactive with the Pax-6 antibody represent GBCs and/or HBCs, we performed double immunohistochemistry with the Pax-6 antibody and an antibody to neural cellular adhesion molecule (NCAM), a marker for GBCs and neurons but not HBCs (Miragall et al., 1988; Caggiano et al., 1994). Immunostaining with the anti-NCAM antibody on PD1 OE revealed cell surface localization of NCAM in GBCs as well as on neuronal cell bodies, dendrites, and axons (Fig. 8H). Pax-6 immunoreactivity, visualized with a reddish-purple substrate followed by NCAM staining (blue-gray), revealed that cells stained for either Pax-6 or NCAM but not for both of the antigens (Fig. 8I). Interestingly, Pax-6 is restricted to the non-GBCs and may represent a novel marker for the horizontal class of basal cells. The ability of this procedure to detect double-labeled cells was demonstrated by incubating first with anti-Olf-1 antibody and subsequently with the NCAM antibody. The plasma membrane and the dendritic processes of the cells with Olf-1 positive nuclei are outlined (Fig.8J).

DISCUSSION

Olf-1 in olfactory development

The expression of Olf-1 protein, originally identified in adult olfactory neurons, is first observed at ED11 and continues through gestation into the mature animal, where it is detected in olfactory sensory neurons and some basal cells. The VNO system and the main olfactory organ are primarily responsible for the detection of pheromones and volatile odorants, respectively (Shipley and Smith, 1995). The similar expression pattern of Olf-1 in the VNO and the OE proper may reflect their common embryonic origins from the olfactory placode and/or continual replacement of neurons in both systems (Barber and Raisman, 1974; Costanzo and Graziadei, 1987). Consistent with the idea that Olf-1 is expressed in olfactory placode derivatives is the finding that what may be LNRH neurons, which arise in the olfactory placode and migrate to the hypothalamus (Schwanzel-Fukuda and Pfaff, 1989), also seem to express Olf-1 protein. LNRH-positive cells migrate out of the olfactory pit at E11 coincident with the onset of Olf-1 expression (Schwanzel-Fukuda and Pfaff, 1990).

Although transcription factors with restricted patterns of expression in the adult usually act to regulate a panel of tissue-specific genes, the same factors may have different roles during development, as has been shown for the distal-less-2 and fushi tarazugene products (Price et al., 1991; Turner et al., 1994). The onset of Olf-1 expression at midgestation comes after the formation of the olfactory placode and subsequent invagination of the olfactory pit, making it unlikely that Olf-1 is involved in neuronal determination. The number of mitotic figures in the olfactory pit decreases at E11, and the epithelial cells begin to extend apical processes resembling dendrites to the apical surface and axon-like processes to the base of the epithelium (Smart, 1971; Cuschieri and Bannister, 1975a,b). In light of the finding that Olf-1 is turned on in the OE when neuronal precursors are leaving the cell cycle and beginning to differentiate, we propose that Olf-1 plays a role in olfactory neuronal differentiation during embryogenesis as well as in the adult olfactory neurons. In other systems, factors with similar roles in neural development include T-Brain-1 (Bulfone et al., 1995) and Brn 3.2 (Turner et al., 1994). As an olfactory neuron matures, either later in gestation or during replacement in the adult epithelium, Olf-1 may function to activate transcription of olfactory neuron-specific genes, thereby regulating a specific cell phenotype (Treacy et al., 1991). An Olf-1 binding site has been identified in at least six olfactory-enriched genes (Kudrycki et al., 1993; Wang et al., 1993) and seems to play a functional role in the expression of at least one of these genes (Kudrycki et al., 1993). Temporally, Olf-1 expression precedes the onset of expression of several olfactory-enriched genes in the embryo and remains expressed in the mature neuron (Margalit and Lancet, 1993), consistent with a role in the establishment and maintenance of the neuronal phenotype.

A transcription factor from mouse pre-B lymphocytes known as early B-cell factor (EBF), apparently identical to Olf-1 (Hagman et al., 1993) except for eight amino acids introduced by alternative splicing, has been identified by virtue of its binding to a canonical Olf-1 site in the proximal promoter of the mb-1 gene. When the EBF/Olf-1 gene was disrupted by homologous recombination, the homozygous mutant mice had defects in B-cell development, whereas the OE appeared normal (Lin and Grosschedl, 1995). Interestingly, we have been unable to detect Olf-1 immunoreactivity in embryonic and adult sites of B-cell production (data not shown). We have obtained evidence for additional Olf-1-related proteins in OE (S. Wong and R. Reed, unpublished observations) that may serve partially redundant functions and explain the absence of observable olfactory deficits. MyoD and Myf-5, basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) proteins involved in differentiation of muscle, play a similar, functionally redundant role in that system (Rudnicki et al., 1993). We have used in situ hybridization as a stringent method to confirm that the immunohistochemical studies described here reflect the pattern of expression of the Olf-1 gene (data not shown). An understanding of the function of Olf-1 and other members of this transcription factor family in neuronal development will require the complete mapping of their patterns of expression.

Development of the olfactory neuron, like other specific cell types, involves the sequential activation and inactivation of a hierarchy of transcriptional regulators. The expression of Olf-1 in postmitotic cells suggests that it lies downstream of transcription factors that play a role in the commitment of proliferating cells to the neuronal lineage. Mash-1, a bHLH protein expressed in undifferentiated cells of the nasal placode at E9.5 (Guillemot and Joyner, 1993), is required for normal olfactory neuron development, as shown by the massive reduction in the number of these neurons in a Mash-1 knockout mouse (Guillemot et al., 1993). Moreover, a small number of cells express Mash-1 in the adult epithelium (Calof, 1995) and may represent precursors to terminally differentiated olfactory neurons in the adult. Our observation that Olf-1 expression appears in differentiating neuronal cells, combined with the findings above, suggests that Olf-1 may be a downstream target of Mash-1. A recently described bHLH gene, NeuroD, is expressed transiently in the CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS), including the olfactory placode, and has been implicated in several steps of neural development (Lee et al., 1995). The role of NeuroD in olfactory neuron development, and its potential relationship with Olf-1, requires further study.

Widespread Olf-1 expression in nervous tissue of the developing embryo

The studies described here reveal that Olf-1 is specifically associated with subsets of postproliferative neurons throughout the developing nervous system. The transient nature of its expression outside of the olfactory system and its sustained expression in adult olfactory neuronal tissue, which continues to proliferate throughout life, supports the hypothesis that Olf-1 functions in a more general role in neurogenesis. The unique spatial and temporal patterns of Olf-1 expression in the embryo clearly suggest a role for the Olf-1 protein in neuronal development. Immunostaining and in situhybridization (data not shown) revealed Olf-1 protein/mRNA in a subset of cells exclusively within the CNS and PNS. In general, Olf-1 is expressed transiently, beginning at E11 and continuing through late gestation; in the adult, it is extinguished in all tissues except the OE, VNO, and retina. The onset of Olf-1 expression at a particular site within the nervous system precedes or coincides with overt differentiation at that site. For example, Olf-1 protein was detected at E11 in the DRGs shortly before peak production of the small-diameter cells on E12, whereas it was first observed at E12 in the spinal cord when sensory neurons, which are born from E11.5–E13.5, are commencing differentiation (Nornes and Carry, 1978). The spatial pattern of Olf-1 immunostaining, generally just outside the ventricular zone, suggests that Olf-1 is expressed in postmitotic cells. Neurons are born from dividing neuroblasts populating the ventricular zone surrounding the ventricle (lumen) of the CNS, and their progeny sequentially leave the mitotic cycle and migrate laterally into distinct locations to differentiate (Sidman et al., 1959; Angevine and Sidman, 1961). Therefore, both the timing and location of Olf-1 expression suggest a role for Olf-1 in the postmitotic, neural cell that has commenced a course of differentiation. Olf-1 joins a small group of factors that have been found selectively in postmitotic cells, including Brn-3.2, OTP, and T-Brain (Simeone et al., 1994; Turner et al., 1994; Bulfone et al., 1995) .

Olf-1 is found in cells arising from embryonically distinct origins, including neural tube, neural crest, and placodes, suggesting that Olf-1 may participate in a basic process in neurogenesis common to many different neuronal cell types as well as play an additional role in the specification of neuronal phenotype in the olfactory neuron. Furthermore, where it is possible to distinguish, Olf-1 is expressed in neuronal precursors of sensory structures, including the retina, inner ear, OE, sensory ganglia, and dorsal column of the neural tube. We have not detected Olf-1 protein in identifiable structures mediating motor functions.

Pax-6 protein in OE and retina

Previous in situ hybridization analysis of murine Pax-6, a paired-box- and homeodomain-containing protein, showed that Pax-6 mRNA was present in the embryonic nervous system, including distinct regions of the brain, neural tube, eye, pituitary, and OE (Walther and Gruss, 1991). The early embryonic onset and its exclusive expression in ectodermally derived tissue made Pax-6 a candidate regulatory molecule in the development of the CNS. The generation of a Pax-6-specific antibody and the analysis reported here demonstrate that in contrast to neuronally expressed Olf-1, Pax-6 protein is localized to non-neuronal cells in the olfactory system, including the nuclei of sustentacular cells, a subset of basal cells, and a subset of cells in the Bowman’s glands. In addition, Pax-6 protein is detected in cornea, lens, and cells of the optic vesicle of the developing eye. In the mature mouse retina, Pax-6 is expressed in cells of the GCL and INuL, consistent with the localization of Pax-6 mRNA in the adult quail retina (Martin et al., 1992).

Differentiation of the olfactory organ from the ectodermally derived olfactory placode is a complex process that involves formation of sensory neurons as well as several types of non-neuronal cells, including sustentacular cells and Bowman’s glands. In most vertebrates, the cells of the embryonic ectoderm are similar morphologically, making it difficult to identify subpopulations of cells that will give rise to neuronal versus non-neuronal progeny (Waterman and Meller, 1973; Cuschieri and Bannister, 1975a,b; Klein and Graziadei, 1983). The localization of Pax-6 to sustentacular cells, basal cells, and Bowman’s glands may reflect their common embryonic origins, possibly from the non-neuronal component of the embryonic ectoderm. The importance of Pax-6 in mouse development is suggested bySey mice, in which animals homozygous for a mutation in the Pax-6 gene fail to form olfactory and lens placodes (Thieler et al., 1978; Hogan et al., 1986), and recent analysis has confirmed the expression of Pax-6 mRNA in the nasal placodes (Grindley et al., 1995). Pax-6 may be required early in placode formation and later in the regulation of non-neuronal, lineage-specific genes. An examination of olfactory placode development using our Pax-6 antibody, in conjunction with a neuronal cell marker such as Mash-1, will allow us to determine the time course and spatial pattern of Pax-6 protein expression within the developing placode. The nonoverlapping cellular localization pattern of Pax-6 and Olf-1 make it unlikely that these factors interact directly with each other. Rather, these proteins may demarcate distinct cell lineages within the developing epithelium and permit a clearer understanding of olfactory organ development.

Footnotes

This work was supported by grants from National Institutes of Health and the Human Frontiers Science Program to R.R.R. We are indebted to our family members for their continued support and patience, and we are grateful for the contributions of Karen Schrader, Tim Koenig, Se-Jin Lee, Pat Wilcox, and Diane Stewart. We thank Mark Molliver, Gabriele Ronnett, and the members of the Reed laboratory for stimulating and supportive discussions.